supposed that it was she, because the archives mention her name in close association with the discoverer’s, and because she was the only spinster of her rank to live at Fort Frontenac
general. The latter, a victim of the ill-will of Frontenac [Buade*], whose hostility was unrelenting, had been ill for
Buade de Frontenac. The latter informed the minister that d’Auteuil was incompetent and under the influence of the Jesuits. Frontenac, however, had no recourse but to allow the registration of
had wanted a military fort, his successor, Buade de Frontenac, two years later
e partie, lettres à M. Tronson. Jug. et délib., I, 862, 866, 867. Eccles, Frontenac, 68f. Henri Gauthier, La Compagnie de Saint-Sulpice au Canada
Buade* de Frontenac’s expedition during the summer of 1696 against the same enemies. He earned a citation as a “good officer.” In 1702 he became captain of a company of colonial regular troops
Frontenac [Buade*] sent Deschaillons, then 25 years old, and 15
detachment in Louis Buade* de Frontenac’s expedition to Lake Ontario in 1673, when Fort Cataracoui (Frontenac) was built
General Phips* took Acadia in 1690, and lodged a complaint with the Earl of Bellomont, governor of Massachusetts. Late in 1695 La Tour was cited in dispatches by Frontenac
Buade de Frontenac wrote on 9 Jan. 1673: “The great zeal that Sieur Abbé de Fénelon has exhibited for several years in the propagation of Christianity in this colony, and the devotion that
Sampson had been commander of the town guard until the militia was called up, and as major of the 3rd Regiment of Frontenac militia he was a member of the court martial at Fort Henry which condemned Nils
.
Sherbrooke County in 1850 included not the town but the present counties of Richmond, Wolfe, Compton, and Frontenac; only 15 per cent of the population was French Canadian. Sanborn was opposed by Chester B
& Co. credit ledger, Canada, 25: 225 (mfm. at NA). Frontenac Land Registry Office (Kingston, Ont.), Abstract index to deeds, Barrie Township, concession 8, lot 27; concessions 9–10, lot 28; concession 10
; Buade* de Frontenac wrote in 1697: “It is true that four years ago the Sieur Sarrazin was surgeon-major of the colonial regular troops, and that . . . [he had] retired a year previously to a
Fort Frontenac (Kingston, Ont.). Vaudreuil wanted the fort, which had been destroyed by John Bradstreet* in August 1758, rebuilt as a supply
Buade de Frontenac in 1678 about the sale of spirits to Indigenous people. Saurel approved of this traffic, for according to him they would turn to the Dutch if the French defaulted. He was
October (16 October, N.S.) to deliver an ultimatum to Buade* de Frontenac to surrender. Savage was “carried
the south bank of the St Lawrence, opposite Montreal. Shortly before their arrival, Governor Frontenac
who had been sent as an emissary to the Iroquois by Buade* de Frontenac, governor of Canada – was taken back to
arranged. In an angry letter to Abercromby in June 1758, Vaudreuil recalled Schuyler, who returned in August authorized to negotiate prisoner exchanges. With the fall of Fort Frontenac (Kingston, Ont